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About 20 Central American migrants riding a bus through Mexico on their way to the U.S. disappeared last week. Some reports say they were kidnapped near the border with Texas by armed people, but the Mexican president has his own theories.

In a ruling issued Friday, Judge Roslyn Silver found an Arizona Department of Corrections policy “violates the First Amendment on its face.” The Arizona Department of Corrections says it is reviewing the ruling.

Scottsdale is hosting an exhibit of violins that bore witness to one of the darkest periods of the 20th century. The restored instruments that make up "Violins of Hope" were played during, and survived, the Holocaust. There are currently more than 20 violins on display at the Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts.

California is much closer now to finalizing its end of a multi-state drought plan, but not without ruffling a few feathers. KUNC's Luke Runyon reported what Arizona needs to do to come to the table and reach an agreement.

Kate Gallego is Phoenix's new mayor-elect as of Tuesday night, but poll watchers know there were two other ongoing races — elections for City Council District 5 and District 8 — both of which had no lack of candidates.

New York State Attorney General Leticia James has opened a new investigation into the Trump Organization, issuing subpoenas to Deutsche Bank and Investors Bank for documents pertaining to four failed projects, including a 2014 attempted bid to buy the Buffalo Bills.

We've covered what signal detection theory is, so how does it come up when we assign labels to behaviors that could be considered "micro aggressions?" Are there significant benefits to these labels? In the second episode of this conversation, we continue our discussion on signal detection.

Arizona Senators Kyrsten Sinema and Martha McSally signed a letter in early March asking Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to protect Mexican tomato imports. Seven other members of Congress signed on to the letter.

Pinal County farmers say they need an additional $20 million to help drill new wells to replace the Colorado River water that they’ll be giving up. A Globe lawmaker has helped advanced a measure in hopes of getting that money.